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Earth Is Now Our Only Shareholder

If we have any hope of a thriving planet—much less a business—it is going to take all of us doing what we can with the resources we have. This is what we can do.

Read Yvon’s Letter

Living Wage

A living wage should cover a decent standard of living for the worker and their family, which includes food, water, housing, education, health care, transportation, clothing and other essential needs, including essentials for unexpected events.

Cómo

Most factory workers in the apparel industry do not earn a living wage and must make trade-offs to cover their basic needs. Patagonia has worked hard to ensure that workers in our partner factories are paid according to local labor law with regard to minimum wage, overtime pay and statutory benefits, and yet we know that those wages are too often not enough to afford a decent standard of living.

Living Wages: A Basic Human Right

The United Nations and its International Labour Organization (ILO) have declared living wages a basic human right.

After extensive research on living wages and discussions with other brands, NGOs and living wage organizations, Patagonia supports the Global Living Wage Coalition’s (GLWC) definition for a living wage:

The remuneration received for a standard workweek by a worker in a particular place sufficient to afford a decent standard of living for the worker and her or his family. Elements of a decent standard of living include food, water, housing, education, health care, transportation, clothing and other essential needs, including provision for unexpected events.

Historically, there had been little data on wages and the cost of living across different regions. The launch of the Anker Methodology in 2017 made it possible to estimate living wages and compare them across different countries while also looking at local costs of living for a typical family within a specific area. Patagonia supports this methodology because it works with local people and organizations to estimate the cost of a basic but decent lifestyle for a worker and their family in a particular place. This approach, which requires transparency and detailed research, leads to estimates of living wage benchmarks that are solid and credible. The GLWC, one of the founders of the methodology, has already completed living wage benchmarks across 20-plus countries, with more to come. These living wage benchmarks are open source for anyone to use.

These benchmarks are also included in the Fair Labor Association’s fair compensation and living wage dashboard, which Patagonia helped to develop. The dashboard is consistent with the Anker Methodology and houses data collected by apparel and footwear brands about wages from hundreds of factories across the globe. The dashboard makes it easier for us to find differences between living wages and existing wages in specific factories, so we can work more effectively to close those gaps.

Dónde Estamos

Patagonia believes that every worker has the right to a living wage. As a founding member of the Fair Labor Association (FLA), we have embedded its living wage standard requirements in our code of conduct and developed an approach to improving wages in our partner factories.

As of 2022, 34% (10 out of 29) of our apparel-assembly factories are paying their workers a living wage, on average.

We continue to research and explore different ways to help our suppliers and apparel workers when they face unpredictable economic or climate shocks—and living wages for workers are foundational for this undertaking.

Qué Sigue

We will continue to collect wage data from our suppliers annually to monitor the progress toward our goal of attaining living wages in our apparel assembly factories by 2025. We’re also piloting innovative approaches throughout our supply chain to meaningfully raise wages for workers.

We know that we can’t achieve living wages alone. We need to partner with other brands, organizations and industry initiatives to close wage gaps throughout the global supply chain. We’re working closely with the Fair Labor Association (FLA) to support their work in this area and encourage more brands to engage with the FLA in their living wage work.

For Companies:
Companies play an important role in raising wages. Start by examining your company’s supply chain and business practices and then talk with experts about living wages. Achieving a living wage is challenging for companies working with a large number of factories, but brand collaboration will be the catalyst for change. Here are some tips to get you started:

  • Read more about our social responsibility work here, as well as our philosophy on working with factories to promote and sustain fair labor practices. All these approaches have helped us get to where we are in implementing our living wage strategy.
  • Familiarize yourself with the Anker Methodology for estimating living wages.
  • Seek out experts and organizations working to increase wages.
  • Join the Fair Labor Association. The FLA’s Fair Compensation Strategy offers a road map toward living wages, and its living wage dashboard is a great tool to analyze global wage data as you develop your program.
  • For Customers:
    You have the power to change the way clothes are made.

    Informed customers can vote with their dollars and support brands that are working toward a living wage. Ask your favorite brands what they’re doing to help their factories achieve a living wage. Demand better practices—what you buy is what the industry will become.

    Our Road to Living Wages
    Our living wage strategy is built on four key principles:

    • We believe in working directly with our factories to find and pilot tailored, multipronged approaches to achieving and maintaining a living wage.
    • We are committed to working with other companies, suppliers, workers, NGOs, unions, experts, academics and customers to achieve these goals.
    • We want to implement a sustainable living wage strategy that makes it easier for suppliers to pay a living wage even during fluctuations in their business.
    • We want to share our lessons, including what has worked and what hasn’t, so that solutions can be scaled up. We’re accomplishing this goal by joining industry conferences and meetings, as well as engaging in one-on-one calls with other brands and NGOs.
    • Phase 1: Launch
      2010–2011: Patagonia’s Social and Environmental Responsibility (SER) team helped develop the Fair Labor Association’s Supplier Code of Conduct language that requires its member brands to work toward a living wage.

      2013: We began our partnership with Fair Trade USA, our first step on the journey toward a living wage. We also published our revised Supplier Code of Conduct, which included a living wage component.

      2014: We were part of a multi-stakeholder consultation to create the FLA’s Fair Compensation Workplan: their vision for how to achieve living wages in apparel- and footwear-assembly factories. In anticipation of the workplan, we created a Patagonia internal Fair Wage Taskforce, a cross-departmental team tasked with supporting the FLA and figuring out Patagonia’s pathway to achieving living wages in our supply chain.

      Phase 2: Taking Stock
      2015: The FLA published its Fair Compensation Workplan, which we used as the foundation for an internal goal to reach living wages in our apparel-assembly factories by 2025.

      2016: We began our work with FLA members to build the best method for gathering and analyzing wage data for our apparel-assembly factories. We piloted a tool to collect wage data with 10 of our apparel-assembly factories.

      2017: We continued to work with the FLA by completing our pilot to gather wages for 10 apparel-assembly factories. As we tried to understand which of Patagonia’s apparel-assembly factories deserved immediate attention to narrow the gap between current wages and a living wage, we asked MIT students in the Sustainable Business Lab to help us find an easier way to gather wage data across a large supply chain. The students developed a model for streamlined collection of this data.

      2018: Early in the year we piloted the FLA’s improved wage data collection tool with 10 apparel-assembly factories. The pilot went well, so we scheduled interactive training webinars with our apparel-assembly suppliers. In the webinars we officially launched our living wage program, announced our goal, defined the living wage, showed the importance of the living wage, communicated our strategy for achieving a living wage, discussed the next steps and our program timeline, and answered questions and received feedback. After the official launch of our program with our suppliers, we finished collecting wage data. With this data in hand, we enlisted the help of the MIT Sustainable Business Lab to help analyze it.

      2019: We updated our analysis of living wages in our apparel-assembly supply chain. Our report showed that 35%, or 11 out of 31 apparel-assembly factories, were paying a living wage, on average, at that time. This data was gathered before the COVID-19 pandemic and reflects a significantly different economic reality for these workers and factories.

      2020: We updated our analysis of living wages in our apparel-assembly supply chain. Our report showed that in 2020, 39%, or 12 out of 31 apparel-assembly factories, were paying a living wage, on average, at that time.

      2021: We continued our annual analysis of wages across our apparel assembly supply chain. In 2021, 33%, or 10 out of 30 apparel-assembly factories, were paying a living wage, on average, at that time. This means compared to 2020, almost all factories that were paying living wages before the pandemic continued to do so into 2021. Given the economic impact of the pandemic, we applaud our supplier partners for their ongoing commitment even in the most difficult times. Overall, our annual wage analysis at these 33 factories gives us insight into the wages paid to more than 50,000 workers in factories around the world.

      2022: Our annual wage analysis for 2022 found that 34%, or 10 out of 29 apparel-assembly factories, were paying a living wage, on average. This shows that suppliers’ attainment of living wages is remaining relatively stable, despite the economic and other challenges of these past few years.

      Phase 3: Learning, Planning & Making Change
      2021: We started planning pilots with our apparel-assembly suppliers to increase workers’ wages without jeopardizing the competitiveness of these factories. Our plan was to roll out one or two pilots per year and to share the results with the FLA in order to create a helpful forum in which participating brands and suppliers could work together toward a common goal. However, with the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, we were unable to move forward with the pilots as a result of the significant economic impacts on our business and on our suppliers, as well as the logistical difficulties involved in doing work on-site with the associated risks of spreading COVID-19. We reevaluated where our suppliers are, and we adapted our work to see how we can make the most impact.

      2022: We launched two pilots—one that was fully remote, and the other that included both a remote and an on-site component. These pilots explored wage-payment systems at specific suppliers and also examined possible gendered aspects of wage gaps. These pilots will inform our work going forward, as we continue to explore ways to close living wage gaps.

      2023: We worked with two factories to conduct onsite pilots focused on the verification of wages and living wage gaps. This pilot incorporated data analysis as well as worker and management interviews in order to verify living wage data we collect remotely. We are continuing to learn from all these pilots to inform our living wage work moving forward.

      In addition to pilots, we continue to invest in living wage efforts that can serve others in our industry and in other industries as well. In 2021 we partnered with the FLA to fund three living- wage benchmark studies in El Salvador, Colombia and Thailand. These estimates were produced using the Anker Methodology through the Anker Research Institute and will be available free of charge on the GLWC website when they are completed. This is important work because it increases the quality of data available to global stakeholders, which helps them progress their living wage work. We look forward to continuing to support the important work of the Anker Research Institute to produce and update living wage benchmark studies around the world.

      We also recognize the crucial role of governments and other institutions in helping to attain a living wage for workers. One of the challenges to achieving living wages is low minimum-wage rates around the world. In 2023, Patagonia took the important step to publicly support a minimum wage increase in Bangladesh for the ready-made garment sector that’s in line with a living wage for workers and their families as determined by the Bangladesh Institute for Labour Studies and the Global Living Wage Coalition. While much work still needs to be done in this area, we are hopeful that using our brand voice to advocate for living wage progress can help impact change at a policy level.

Living Wage
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